Tuesday, October 16, 2012

Sikh temple centennial party culminates in parade

Buy This Photo



Thosands of Sikhs march down California Street near Market Street in the annual Sikh Parade through downtown Stockton.CLIFFORD OTO/The Record

"; aryZooms[imgCounter] = "javascript: NewWindow(870,625,window.document.location+'?Template=photos&img="+imgCounter+"')"; var match = /The Record/.test("CLIFFORD OTO/The Record"); if (match==false || "CLIFFORD OTO/The Record"==""){ document.getElementById('purchasePhoto').style.display = "none"; } bolImages=true; Jo Ann Kirby

October 15, 2012 12:00 AM

"; aryZooms[imgCounter] = "javascript: NewWindow(870,625,window.document.location+'?Template=photos&img="+imgCounter+"')";

STOCKTON - The Sikh community came from near and far this weekend to celebrate the 100th anniversary of the Stockton Gurdwara - a temple on South Grant Street that holds special meaning, because it represents the first permanent Sikh settlement in the United States.

A weekend of events, including the reading of a state resolution honoring the centennial, culminated Sunday with a colorful parade through downtown Stockton.

Attended by a throng of thousands, the stop-and-go parade was punctuated by martial arts demonstrations, live music and a veritable rolling potluck of sorts.

"We were just standing here watching the parade, and a guy walked up with a crate and handed us this," Brian Debem of Stockton said as he dug a plastic fork into a plate of fruit. "It's kind of like a fruit cocktail, but its not sweet, it's spicy."

And there were plenty more opportunities to sample all kinds of dishes and beverages along the parade route. Not surprising, because the temple was specifically built to offer food and drink to those in need.

"; aryZooms[imgCounter] = "javascript: NewWindow(870,625,window.document.location+'?Template=photos&img="+imgCounter+"')";

There were offerings of stew, baked goods, candy, tea, and from the back of pickups, young men handed out cans of soda, bottled water and other drinks.

Periodically, the parade stopped and participants gathered in a circle to watch performers engage in martial arts demonstrations.

Taranpreet Singh, 13, said the weekend was an important religious event in the Sikh community in which he was proud to participate with so many others.

"We used to fight like this to protect our people," he explained. "But now, our martial arts is considered an art form."

He and his friends wore white tunics with bright orange sashes tied around their waists and wielded long batons as they performed.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/RecordnetLatestHeadlines/~3/4VPuOqeGDsU/article

terminator salvation terminator salvation deron williams jarhead montrose marshawn lynch earthquake bay area

No comments:

Post a Comment